Heath’s (
Upstream) book focuses on discovering points of intervention that enable organizations to turn processes and systems that aren’t working into changes that yield big, lasting returns. The book’s first five chapters are dedicated to a method for locating leverage points in which intervention can produce valuable change. The second half of the book looks at how organizations can reorganize resources to fuel those leverage points. Heath uses examples from hospitals, the fast-food industry, customer service, and high school career offices as success stories. If this sounds like a work about project management principles, it is; Heath shows readers how agile project management can be utilized without entering into a never-ending cycle of customer-facing improvement. Each chapter concludes with a summary and a list of resources.
VERDICT Heath’s clear writing will appeal to business readers, but there’s enough research to give the book some academic heft as well. Its focus on making business changes that can have a lasting impact on employees separates the book from other titles about organizational change.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!